Incomplete returns indicated voters in different parts of Cook County were making very different judgments about the state’s attorney contest. Kim Foxx was winning handily in the city but just barely besting Bill Conway.
By Mark Brown@MarkBrownCST Mar 17, 2020, 9:26pm CDT
In the end, Cook County State’s Attorney Kim Foxx’s detractors may have had the right issue with which to beat her but not the right candidate.
The toll taken by the Jussie Smollett case on Foxx’s popularity was evident in Tuesday’s Democratic primary results that showed the incumbent appearing to fall short of a majority.
But four years after racking up 58% of the vote to oust Anita Alvarez from office, Foxx’s high-40s showing was more than enough to best three challengers who never caught fire and served to undercut each other.
Bill Conway, a former assistant state’s attorney and Navy veteran whose campaign was bankrolled with $10.5 million by his billionaire father, torched Foxx for months with a double-barreled ad campaign aimed at the Smollett debacle and her acceptance of fundraising help from indicted Ald. Edward Burke (14th).
The ads hurt Foxx, but Conway was never able to make a convincing case for himself based on his thin record of public service.
Conway could have benefitted greatly from a newspaper editorial board or two blessing his candidacy, but all the city’s major papers found his credentials for the job lacking.
Donna More, a former federal and state prosecutor turned gaming lawyer, picked up some of those endorsements, but didn’t have the money to take advantage of them to sell herself to a broader public. More, making her second run for the office, did keep the anti-Foxx vote from coalescing around Conway.
Former 2ndWard alderman Bob Fioretti, who keeps on running for higher office despite clear indications from voters that they aren’t buying what he’s selling, got another comeuppance for his troubles but also served to chop up the vote.
Incomplete returns indicated voters in different parts of Cook County were making very different judgments about the state’s attorney contest. Foxx was winning handily in the city but just barely besting Conway.
You know what that usually means in Cook County: race.
From the start, there has been a sense that the Smollett case was provoking a much stronger negative response from white voters, including from some Republican voters who may have taken Democratic ballots Tuesday.
Some of that white backlash may have been racism. Some of it was just a difference of opinion. Black voters may not have liked how Smollett walked away without admitting guilt either, but they were more likely to give Foxx the benefit of the doubt.
Foxx also hung on to enough of her progressive base by successfully arguing that her overall track record delivered on her promise of reform by refocusing the state’s attorney’s office on more serious crime.
More attention than usual will now be paid to whether the Republican nominee, which looks to be former judge and high-ranking assistant state’s attorney Patrick O’Brien, will have a chance against Foxx in November.
That’s extremely unlikely in heavily Democratic Cook County — unless special prosecutor Dan Webb weighs in with new evidence about Foxx’s handling of the Smollett case.
I’m not expecting any.
I'm really hoping to see how the 19th ward actually voted. Anyone know if that info is up anywhere yet? Looks like we all have to get behind O'Shea,whoever that is!! Shame on the denizens of 3rd Con.District who voted for that horror show Newman. Her abortion stance aside,she's just a bad person period!!
ReplyDeleteO'Shea's mailings did not have an endorsement for State's Attorney.
DeleteThe 11th Ward really screwed Lipinski over good, an 11th Ward politician should never ever be on the Sample Ballot. The Bad Blood is here forever and the new socialist progressive Democratic Party love it. Shows the 11th Ward would rather burn down the city, F them.
DeleteConway spoke out against President Trump. That hurt him with me.
ReplyDeleteWe were only supposed to vote for Conway to dump Foxx and then in Nov we were to pull the for the GOP nominee
DeleteBill Conway is a great Irish American man, who should have won.
DeleteYeah, he is an oath breaker turn coat progressive.No different than Foxx, he will do whatever his Democrat/Socialist Master tells him.Pick your poison.
DeleteThat's true. But, you have to decide which person is more apt to prosecute offenders professionally.
DeleteWell so far the only numbers I can find as far as the 19th ward is that less than half of the registered voters cast a ballot
ReplyDeleteA campaign for democratic crossover vote for republican congressional candidate should start now. It appeared republicans only got about 9,000 votes cast compared to the 55,000 democratic votes cast. If we want to reject the Soros leftist/socialist platforms espoused by Newman, AOC and Lemur Lightfoot, we need to remind our family, friend and everyone we know to get behind and push Mike Fricilone before we're saddled with this pro-late term abortion candidate Marie Newman. Because we're not going to see any leadership or help from members of the existing democrats representing us.
ReplyDeleteIn the November General Election, one can vote for a candidate of either major political party, for any/every office.
DeleteAS PREDICTED... FOXX wins, dumb ass dems, many from 19th ward.
ReplyDeleteOne thing I didn't like about Conway was that he used the "P" word to describe himself...Progressive. As we all know by now Progressive is a dressed up term for Bolshevism
ReplyDeleteLipinski voting for the impeachment didn't help him either
ReplyDeleteHaving a pretty face and smile helped Foxx too.
ReplyDeleteThe 19th ward = Sheople
ReplyDelete